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#12 | |
Feb 2005
Colorado
13×47 Posts |
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![]() But math? Not so much... ![]() |
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#13 |
"Eric"
Jan 2018
USA
22·53 Posts |
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I say use PPT (Power Play Table) to tune the clock and voltage a bit instead of using Wattman. But first use Wattman or afterburner to figure out whether if it's the memory that's unstable or not (if it's the memory just drop the clocks in Wattman and it should be good to go), otherwise use PPT to lock the voltage and clockspeed so the boost feature won't cause instability. This is what I did on my Vega 64 to maintain a stable clockspeed and temperature to whatever I want it to be instead of dealing with the default boost behavior. Sometimes it can make a certain clock that's usually unstable stable again.
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#14 | |
Sep 2006
The Netherlands
26·11 Posts |
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The first 5000 that they produced are actually Radeon Instinct MI50's that they put a sticker Radeon VII onto. They are 6.6 Tflops double precision which they sold as 'radeon vii's. Being capable of executing 3.3 Tops is a lot (3.3 T double precision instructions a clock - where FMA counts as 1 instruction). When they sell next batch it's not clear whether it still is the same gpu or whether it's a fiat panda edition with lobotomized fp64. Like first 5000 panda's are having a V12 Ferrari engine of 6.6 Tflops pardon i mean liters and when they want to make money with it it's a 2 cylinder fiat panda. I have no information whatsoever so i assume it's gonna be fiat panda's. Would be interesting to know though. All those 'benchmark websites' already tested the radeon vii so they are not gonna change that any soon. Who would notice anyway? I've seen supercomputers sold for dozens of millions of dollars factor 12 slower than they would be on paper ("marketing lies" in order to win the bidding contest) that never got tested during their lifetime. Yeah well until i ran on it and had written code for it that 'assumed' it would be 12x faster than it was :) |
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#15 | |
"Mihai Preda"
Apr 2015
5×271 Posts |
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That is not my experience. I bought multiple RadeonVII at regular intervals (roughly 2 months apart), from multiple vendors, and all have similar performance. Small differences in undervolting (that is expected), but otherwise the same. Even the XFXs (I have two) are perfectly fine, it's just that the others undervolt a tiny bit better, not a big deal. I did have fan trouble on the Asrock one (treated with teflon oil).
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#16 |
Sep 2006
The Netherlands
10110000002 Posts |
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#17 |
Sep 2006
The Netherlands
26×11 Posts |
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As you can see here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o...eon_VII_series the mi50 gets listed as 6.6 Tflops double precision and the radeon VII gets listed as 2.x Tflops. Factor 3 slower. |
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#18 | |
"Sam Laur"
Dec 2018
Turku, Finland
2×3×5×11 Posts |
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The AMD Radeon VII product page lists peak DP compute as 3.46 TFLOPS. That Tweaktown article is over a year old now. They didn't know much about the card back then. Anyway the real MI50 is now available for qualified buyers (datacenter customers), the 16GB model is less than $4000 while the 32GB model is about $4400. They've actually discontinued the MI60 32GB model that had all the compute units enabled. It is well known by this point, a year later, that the Radeon VII hardware is pretty much the same as that Radeon Instinct MI50 16GB model, but with 1:4 FP64 instead of 1:2. The silicon is identical, it is limited in some other way (vBIOS?) |
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#19 | |
Sep 2006
The Netherlands
26·11 Posts |
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The question is whether the cards we see now LL benchmarks from are 6.7 Tflops double precision - in short not lobotimized in FP64 whereas what they sell FEBRUARI 2020 and later are Fiat Panda's that get lobotomized which get 2.x Tflops double precision on paper. Last fiddled with by diep on 2020-01-21 at 16:03 |
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#20 |
Feb 2005
Colorado
13·47 Posts |
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I recently got my card used, but I haven't figured out how to determine its date of manufacture. Do you have a method for that?
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#21 | |
Sep 2006
The Netherlands
26·11 Posts |
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Let's use logics in a normal real world manner here. What's a 6.7 tflops Tesla selling for these days. 5000 dollar or so? So AMD basically invested 25 million dollar more or less into the first 5000 cards just in order to have a gpu on it that overclocks wonderfully well and has 6.7 tflops worth of double precision resources - all this just to score better in tests. Hoping to sell billions of dollars worth of radeon vII and its future improved versions - just to position the card very well into the market place. So it should overclock really well and turboboost better by default than the Fiat Panda's that come after the first 5000. So by default in tests it should score higher than the fiat panda's. I see a guy on ebay offer one claiming it overclocks well to 1.9Ghz. That probably is one. (edit; the overclocking is for games - which is very short term. for gpgpu i would advice to not overclock at all of course - you burn up the wires of the gpu (yeah those small 193 nm lines or something which they optimistically call '7 nm technology'). Last fiddled with by diep on 2020-01-21 at 23:37 |
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#22 | |
Feb 2005
Colorado
61110 Posts |
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So I have another possibility to offer: It could be that AMD is doing what all chip makers do, which is take all the chips that won't run reliably at rated speed (MI50 in this case) but are otherwise good, and throw them in a pile destined for later use (in this case the Radeon VII). That might even explain the limited availability, assuming that rumor is even true. The Gigabyte branded board I have comes set at a default speed of 1800Mhz(!) and voltage over a volt. And you're absolutely right: That speed would never work reliably or efficiently when it comes to gpu computing. |
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